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Home Education & Technology Word of the Day

WORD OF THE DAY: RECTIFY

Admin by Admin
May 13, 2026
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RECTIFY

verb | REK-tuh-fye

What It Means

Rectify is a formal word meaning “to correct (something that is wrong).”

READ ALSO

WORD OF THE DAY: CATERCORNER

WORD OF THE DAY: PARAGON

// We were given the wrong room key, but the hotel management quickly rectified the situation.

Rectify in Context

“NYC contributes roughly 54.5% of state revenue but receives only 40.5% back. Our budget proposals work to rectify this unsustainable imbalance and restore the funding our city deserves.” — Cordell Cleare, The New York Daily News, 18 Mar. 2026

Did You Know?

When you rectify something, you correct an error or make things right, which is fitting because rectify and correct both ultimately trace back to the Latin word regere, meaning “to lead straight,” “to direct,” or “to rule.” Rectify has had its “to set right” meaning since the early 16th century, but the word has over the years accrued various other meanings as well, including the specialized uses “to purify especially by repeated or fractional distillation” (as in “rectified alcohol”), “to make (an alternating current) unidirectional,” and several medical applications having to do with healing of one kind or another. Regere plays a part in the histories of several familiar English words, in addition to those mentioned above; the many relatives of rectify include direct, resurrection, and regimen.

Merriam Webster Dictionary

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